PROLOGUEMICROSOFT'S STARTUP PARTNERING JOURNEY
Microsoft's one of the few companies we were able to partner with that actually worked for both companies … Bill [Gates] and Microsoft were really good at it because they didn't make the whole thing in the early days and they learned how to partner with people really well.
– Steve Jobs 1
MICROSOFT: A CASE STUDY IN STARTUP PARTNERING
In October 2010, Microsoft organized an event, billed as the One Summit, at its Silicon Valley campus in Mountain View, California. While Microsoft was well known for its partner-related events and activities, this summit for startups was a first for the company. The event marked the soft launch of a program called BizSpark One, a partnering initiative through which Microsoft partnered with 100 of the most innovative startups that used its technologies, selected from over thousands that had signed up to its BizSpark program launched in 2008. The majority of the startups in that room were from North America and Western Europe.
Fast-forward to April 2019. Walmart CEO Doug McMillon was in Shanghai, China, and one of the local initiatives that he spent time learning about was Omega 8, a partnering program through which that retail giant could work with local startups to solve their pain points. A few startups that had gotten to work with Walmart in China through this program demonstrated their solutions. Apart from the apparent prowess of those startups, the win-win outcomes for them and Walmart, and ...
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